Cells (Sep 2021)

PTX-3 Secreted by Intra-Articular-Injected SMUP-Cells Reduces Pain in an Osteoarthritis Rat Model

  • Minju Lee,
  • Gee-Hye Kim,
  • Miyeon Kim,
  • Ji Min Seo,
  • Yu Mi Kim,
  • Mi Ra Seon,
  • Soyoun Um,
  • Soo Jin Choi,
  • Wonil Oh,
  • Bo Ram Song,
  • Hye Jin Jin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cells10092420
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 9
p. 2420

Abstract

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Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are accessible, abundantly available, and capable of regenerating; they have the potential to be developed as therapeutic agents for diseases. However, concerns remain in their further application. In this study, we developed a SMall cell+Ultra Potent+Scale UP cell (SMUP-Cell) platform to improve whole-cell processing, including manufacturing bioreactors and xeno-free solutions for commercialization. To confirm the superiority of SMUP-Cell improvements, we demonstrated that a molecule secreted by SMUP-Cells is capable of polarizing inflammatory macrophages (M1) into their anti-inflammatory phenotype (M2) at the site of injury in a pain-associated osteoarthritis (OA) model. Lipopolysaccharide-stimulated macrophages co-cultured with SMUP-Cells expressed low levels of M1-phenotype markers (CD11b, tumor necrosis factor-α, interleukin-1α, and interleukin-6), but high levels of M2 markers (CD163 and arginase-1). To identify the paracrine action underlying the anti-inflammatory effect of SMUP-Cells, we employed a cytokine array and detected increased levels of pentraxin-related protein-3 (PTX-3). Additionally, PTX-3 mRNA silencing was applied to confirm PTX-3 function. PTX-3 silencing in SMUP-Cells significantly decreased their therapeutic effects against monosodium iodoacetate (MIA)-induced OA. Thus, PTX-3 expression in injected SMUP-Cells, applied as a therapeutic strategy, reduced pain in an OA model.

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